Example sentences of "[verb] [pron] [adv] [verb] to [art] " in BNC.

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1 Just hold onto the idea that certain operators will possess mathematical properties which make them perfectly suited to the role of representing physical observables .
2 But surprised to find herself materially connected to the universe again .
3 So why has it not led to a rise in conviction rates ?
4 Has it not occurred to the Government and the nation , therefore , that the excessive consumption of alcohol also incurs these same costs to health and the NHS .
5 The facilities start with a remote switch socket for connecting the optional FC6 foot controller , offering remote switching without tying up the MIDI in socket ( I tried the FC6 but found it more suited to a keyboard player , so would recommend a standard MIDI switching pedal ) .
6 Has anything ever happened to the messengers ? ’
7 Many runners spend far too much time fretting about what pace they hope to run , or whether to wear gloves , while ignoring more basic details which could eventually affect their even getting to the start .
8 The Act of Settlement of 1701 , which determined the succession to the throne , affirmed that the laws of England " are the Birthright of the People thereof and all the Kings and Queens who shall ascend the Throne of this Realm ought to administer the Government of the same according to the said Laws and all their Officers and Ministers ought to serve them respectively according to the same . "
9 Let me now go to a number of scriptural passages to see how the New Testament sees the death of Jesus .
10 I do n't know if any of you have ever been to Newcastle before — if not , I 'd be happy to meet you at the station , or wherever , ( as long as it 's not too early in the morning ! ! ) , take you for a drink , and show you how to get to the ground .
11 There are three variants of lotion to enable the stylist to choose one most suited to the client 's hair condition and needs .
12 In Goldring 's case , the customer had done something clearly conveying to the finance company that he did not own the van and that so far as he was concerned the seller ( the trader ) had every right to sell it .
13 By the garden gate of Four Winds she stood looking at the house for several minutes in silence before they got back into the car and she told him how to get to the Inn on the Point .
14 There was no point in warning her not to talk to the Lab staff , or , come to that , the whole village .
15 First to go was a rather nervous Richard Crout with Jesse , a 1908 steam roller , belching out smoke he gingerly took to the roads .
16 It was difficult to tell as , in their search for an individual expression of fashion , they had adopted what virtually amounted to a black uniform .
17 In the light of high political intent and peasant sentiment , let us now return to the market town of Roslavl' and examine Party and urban reactions there in 1922 .
18 Let us now return to the question of assigning lexical units to lexemes .
19 Let us now return to the topic of " existence predicates " .
20 Observe the completely different effect produced by replacing the adjectives in ( 1 ) by the corresponding adverbs , as in : ( 28 ) Ellen shook the keys loosely muzak drives them madly And contrast the two sentences of ( 29 ) ( b ) : ( 29 ) ( a ) what did the new system do to the motors ? ( b ) the new system made the motors quieter the new system made the motors more quietly 5.4 Let us now return to the matter of the resultative nuance which can indeed be observed in all the examples we have given , reproducing the structural diagrams ( 21 ) and ( 22 ) to do so : ( 21 ) ( 22 ) If these diagrams represent the relations actually used in constructing such expressions , it follows that the entity of the noun phrase , as initially present to the mind of the speaker ( and to that of the listener in the final interpretative phase of comprehension ) lacks the property of the adjective since it is structurally separated from it ; however , since that property is expressed by an adjective , then ex hypothesi it will apply to the entity of the noun phrase when the construction is taken as a whole ; if not , then either the property would be expressed by an adverb , and apply to the verb , or the whole construction would be literally incoherent .
21 Let us now come to the second response , namely worship .
22 Let us now turn to a less difficult situation where the rule in section 20 may be affected , i.e. where the seller undertakes to deliver the goods .
23 However , let us now turn to the Great Battle itself .
24 3.4 Let us now turn to the postnominal attributive adjectives .
25 Let us then turn to the ordinary dealings of modern life ; and take an illustration from a corn-market in a country town , and let us assume for the sake of simplicity that all the corn in the market is of the same quality .
26 Ackroyd warns us not to jump to a conflation here , but he is intrigued by the coincidence , and it might almost serve as an emblem of his concern throughout the biography with the connection between poetry and feigning , and with the potency of parody .
27 I do n't think she ever came to the City of the Horizon . ’
28 During the war parachute silk was produced which later changed to the manufacture of the finest dress fabrics , brocades and bridal gowns .
29 I would like you please to refer to the county secretary in the recommendation on page seventy three with the county surveyor .
30 Felicity Sieghart declared herself not dedicated to a career and therefore well qualified to address us .
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